Les Mikesell wrote:
David Krings wrote:
OK, two things: I did not change any BIOS mapping or drive or boot
sequence. I install F7, GRUB installs fine, GRUB boots fine, I install
updates => GRUB is broken beyond repair.
How is it failing? It may be that your update kernel is just in
a location your bios can't load. This used to be common in old bios
versions that couldn't go past 1024 cylinders and is probably possible
again with more exotic drive configurations.
It stops at the grub> prompt. And the board is brand new and not out for
that long that I'd call it old.
I also don't consider a SATA RAID on an nVidia controller as exotic.
Those things are on tons of mobos from at least a dozen vendors.
I did remove drives in order to get F7 to install at all and yes, I
added those drives on later, BUT even after doing that GRUB booted
fine. It is just that after updating the system the whole shebang
comes apart for no good reason. GRUB just ought to continue booting
from the same drive and same partition it booted from before...and it
just doesn't do that.
Also, I do not have plain simple IDE drives, but a RAID array on the
nVidia SATA controller that I want to use to boot from. In that case,
when I specify a hdx device it will write the boot loader to only one
of the drives of the mirror array, which doesn't do any good.
If bios sees the drives as separate things, then that's how you have to
install grub, since it has to call bios to load the kernel. On a real
hardware raid, bios will only see the array.
BIOS sees them as one drive. A working F7 sees them as two drives and as
one under the /mapper dir.
I could see this to be a BIOS problem if nothing loads, but GRUB does
load at least so far as that it gets to the grub> prompt. So it is not
that BIOS is confused. It is purely a GRUB issue.
David
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